Casiano was one of three women who gave dramatic testimony about their pregnancies in a hushed and spellbound courtroom in the case brought by the Center for Reproductive Rights. The case, on behalf of 13 patients and two doctors, argues that the medical exceptions to Texas' laws are unclear and unworkable for doctors in ways that harm patients. They also say that the state has done nothing to clarify its laws.
No, they’re not, but psychopaths will do anything to keep murdering children.
When it was back in session, Casiano described what it was like to give birth to the daughter they named Halo. "She was gasping for air," Casiano said. "I just kept telling myself and my baby that I'm so sorry that this has happened to you. I felt so bad. She had no mercy. There was no mercy there for her."
Abortion is mercy now? Mercy to who? Is the mutilation and tearing apart a child piece by piece with forceps mercy?
Brandt was able to travel out of Texas to receive a selective reduction for a twin whose skull had not developed properly. Zurawski's water broke too early, but she was denied induction or abortion. She went into septic shock and was in the intensive care unit for three days.
Convenient how NPR and the plaintiffs left out that this was allowed under the law but the DOCTORS refused to operate.
Molly Duane, the attorney for the Center for Reproductive Rights, attacked the defendant's arguments, laid out in a court filing in June, that none of the patient plaintiffs have the right to sue the state — the legal concept known as standing. In the document, the state argued that the women's past harm is the fault of the their doctors and their future harm — such as damage to their reproductive health — is hypothetical.
One of the leading known causes of miscarriages is abortion. It’s nearly a statistical certainty that you will at least have one miscarriage if you have an abortion, especially a D&C.
The case, on behalf of 13 patients and two doctors, argues that the medical exceptions to Texas' laws are unclear and unworkable for doctors in ways that harm patients. They also say that the state has done nothing to clarify its laws.
The same thing happened in Ohio, but without a lawsuit. Someone from Illinois, claimed that a doctor from Ohio, claimed that an Ohio anti-abortion trigger law was going to prevent doctors from preforming the removal of dead fetuses from a woman's uterus (dead babies if you prefer); therefore: Ohio abortion laws were killing women.
Truth is, the law never prevented such a thing, but because a doctor claimed it did over a phone call (a doctor who was an abortion activist); that was enough.
It reminds me of when DeSantis's law against grooming children came out and some outlet claimed that a furry convention would close... only for the furry convention itself to explicitly state the law had no impact on the convention.
There are people in the professional class who are intentionally misconstruing what words mean, and then refusing to preform their tasks, and then the media claims that the law stopped an unrelated procedure from happening.
Many doctors have no problem with Texas law. Maybe abortionists are profiting off the dead. The vast majority of doctors will not perform an elective abortion even if it's legal. There is some gray area. Severely deformed babies you never know if they are going to make it. I think some would declare them dead, or non-viable. Certainly not something I can argue with them about.
Clearly the anti-abortion laws haven't gone far enough (it's not a problem of "clarification") and we need to extend the law to punish doctors who refuse to perform the service. No you can't force someone to perform abortions, but you can punish them for failing to provide actual life-saving healthcare to a mother under the pretense that it's because of unclear laws. These activist doctors would have rather let the mothers die so they could make a political example out of them.
Killing the children would stop them from getting them paid in the future. The children are just going to be mutilated so they can be permanent medical patients.
So... Due to no fault at all of the government, corrupt activist doctors groomed women through torture in order to facilitate their love of killing babies? Am I getting the real underlying news story right here?
I dunno where lefties get this idea, but my uh friend is an OBGYN, and they perform abortions all the time. They just don't call it that. Not Texas but also a red state where abortion is illegal. If you were to look up the insurance code for what amounts to an abortion, you'd see it a lot. It's the same procedure. They just don't do it arbitrarily. Most will only do it if you have a reason.
At Catholic hospitals, there are things they won't do. They have a like a guy -- IDK if a doctor or a priest -- who consults. But that's their conscience. You can go somewhere else to have any legal thing done.
No, they’re not, but psychopaths will do anything to keep murdering children.
Abortion is mercy now? Mercy to who? Is the mutilation and tearing apart a child piece by piece with forceps mercy?
Convenient how NPR and the plaintiffs left out that this was allowed under the law but the DOCTORS refused to operate.
One of the leading known causes of miscarriages is abortion. It’s nearly a statistical certainty that you will at least have one miscarriage if you have an abortion, especially a D&C.
The same thing happened in Ohio, but without a lawsuit. Someone from Illinois, claimed that a doctor from Ohio, claimed that an Ohio anti-abortion trigger law was going to prevent doctors from preforming the removal of dead fetuses from a woman's uterus (dead babies if you prefer); therefore: Ohio abortion laws were killing women.
Truth is, the law never prevented such a thing, but because a doctor claimed it did over a phone call (a doctor who was an abortion activist); that was enough.
It reminds me of when DeSantis's law against grooming children came out and some outlet claimed that a furry convention would close... only for the furry convention itself to explicitly state the law had no impact on the convention.
There are people in the professional class who are intentionally misconstruing what words mean, and then refusing to preform their tasks, and then the media claims that the law stopped an unrelated procedure from happening.
It’s intentional on the doctors end and there’s an entire industry funding and propagandizing so they can profit off dead children
Many doctors have no problem with Texas law. Maybe abortionists are profiting off the dead. The vast majority of doctors will not perform an elective abortion even if it's legal. There is some gray area. Severely deformed babies you never know if they are going to make it. I think some would declare them dead, or non-viable. Certainly not something I can argue with them about.
Clearly the anti-abortion laws haven't gone far enough (it's not a problem of "clarification") and we need to extend the law to punish doctors who refuse to perform the service. No you can't force someone to perform abortions, but you can punish them for failing to provide actual life-saving healthcare to a mother under the pretense that it's because of unclear laws. These activist doctors would have rather let the mothers die so they could make a political example out of them.
On the contrary.
Killing the children would stop them from getting them paid in the future. The children are just going to be mutilated so they can be permanent medical patients.
So... Due to no fault at all of the government, corrupt activist doctors groomed women through torture in order to facilitate their love of killing babies? Am I getting the real underlying news story right here?
I dunno where lefties get this idea, but my uh friend is an OBGYN, and they perform abortions all the time. They just don't call it that. Not Texas but also a red state where abortion is illegal. If you were to look up the insurance code for what amounts to an abortion, you'd see it a lot. It's the same procedure. They just don't do it arbitrarily. Most will only do it if you have a reason.
At Catholic hospitals, there are things they won't do. They have a like a guy -- IDK if a doctor or a priest -- who consults. But that's their conscience. You can go somewhere else to have any legal thing done.